Windows 10, Common Post Installation Issues and Solutions

After our previous post on the Windows free upgrade deadline, I received many complaints from people who installed the Windows and the others who were still skeptical. This post features the common issues you may encounter after Windows 10 installation including how to disable Automatic Windows Updates and the best solutions.

To be honest, Windows 10 is the best Windows experience once everything has been set up and running.

Let’s get straight to the Windows 10 common post installation issues.

First of all, you need to know basic information about your system.
Press Win+R and type in msinfo32 to launch the System information console and look for these items
a.Manufacturer
b.Model Number
c.System type( 64 bit or 32 bit/86x) very important
d.RAM

These are the most important, other information are there

1.Windows 10 Download size and options

Yes, the download size is about 3.5 GB to get Windows 10 on your PC. Other additional installations/driver updates might take another 1 GB

Note: if you are upgrading from the Microsoft tool, make sure you have enough data (>4 GB) and a strong network otherwise any network interruption, even at 90%, you start afresh

Solution: Download a good Windows 10 ISO file with any Download Manager (which you can pause and resume at will), click here for the link or buy a DVD from a computer shop.

2.Display issues after installation

80% of the time, this is a common issue, icons becoming larger and funny looking

Solutions:

Go to Device Manager (Shortcut: Win+R, then type devmgmt.msc in the RUN box and press enter or OK). Look for Display Adapter (probably with a yellow alert sign), right click on it and select “Update Driver”.
Then choose “Allow Windows to search for drivers automatically”. Make sure you are connected to the internet and wait for it to do its work.

3.WiFi not working

Same as above, still on the Device Manager, look for “Network Controller”, right click on it and select "update drivers".

For some brands of PC, Windows might not be able to connect to the respective manufacturer’s site so you have to do it manually.

Best to enter through Google (type in your model number + network driver) and make sure you select only the link to the original manufacturer site, then look for Network drivers. If you are confused about the choice, go for either Atheros or Broadcom (tends to install its own network interface) WLAN/Network drivers.
For HP users, just go to http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/ and search for your system model

4.Games not playing

Most games were built for backward compatibility; however, most Windows 10 only came with DirectX 12c graphic engines.

Solutions:

Download DirectX 9 (standalone version -about 90 mb) from Microsoft or any other reliable site and install (You may google “directx 9 offline installer” or “directx_Jun2010_redist.exe”), your GTA, PES etc games will play smoothly.

5.Printer not recognized

Get your printer driver from the “carry-come” boxed CD and run the installation again.

7.Consuming too much data

Just connect the WiFi first, then go to PC Settings > Network > WiFi, then select Advance Options, under your connected WiFi name, you will see “Set as metered connection”, just slide it “ON” and all Windows Updates and Map downloads will be stopped “forever” as long as you don’t change the name of the WiFi hotspot connection.

I recommend you use the Option 2 = Notify before downloading and installing any updates.Or (b) Use the Windows Update service (To disable it completely).

Go to Control Panel > Administrative Tools, you can access Services. In the Services window, scroll down to Windows Update and turn off the process.
To turn it off, right-click on the process, click on Properties and select Disabled. That will take care of Windows Updates not being installed on your machine.